Frustrated and angered Jets fans everywhere are uniting in stadium parking lots, taverns and on the sports talk radio airwaves.

They all want a piece of Paul Hackett, the Jets’ offensive coordinator who’s overseeing an operation that’s produced only seven touchdowns in the last six games.

Yesterday, after a short walk-through at Weeb Ewbank Hall that followed Sunday’s disappointing 18-7 loss to the Steelers in Pittsburgh, Hackett stood front and center, answered questions and was accountable.

“I think struggle is a good word,” Hackett said of the 7-5 Jets’ sputtering offense. “The consistency is not there. We’re flirting with doing some things real well, but the consistency has eluded us.”

After Sunday’s game, Curtis Martin insisted the Jets’ offensive woes weren’t the fault of Hackett. Martin’s take was that the players are accountable for not making enough plays to win games.

Hackett, however, accepted some blame yesterday, saying, “I think the onus is also on me, in terms of how we’ve put it in and how we’ve managed to grasp it, and I think that there’s some things about it in terms of details and consistency that has still escaped us.

“That’s my responsibility. My responsibility in terms of getting it pared down to what we do really well and what we feel good about doing maybe has escaped us a little bit.

“There’s concern, but the only people that can do anything about it are the guys in that room. We’ve got to be able to improve every aspect of what we’re doing because we show flashes of exactly what we’re going to be; we’re just not doing it consistently. We expect more of ourselves than this right now.”

Right now, the Jets are a slumping team in the midst of a psychological crisis, having lost two December games in a row to cloud their playoff chances.

Dating back to late in the Oct. 14 win against Miami, the Jets have gone 79 possessions while scoring only eight touchdowns. Dating back to their Oct. 28 win at Carolina, the Jets have scored seven touchdowns in 69 possessions. That kind of production does not win games and certainly does not get you to the playoffs.

“Maybe we’re still searching for exactly what our style is and exactly what we are as the New York Jets,” Hackett said. “We see flashes of things left and right. But where’s the meat and potatoes? Well, the meat is Curtis Martin carrying the ball probably as well as anyone in the league. Where’s the potatoes? I don’t know.”

The more productive Martin has become this season, the more teams have keyed on him. That’s only going to become more pronounced, putting more pressure on the inconsistent passing game that has produced only 10 TD passes.

In the NFL, 21 QBs have thrown more than 10 TD passes.

“Right now, we’re a running team,” Hackett said. “You stop the run, you stop Curtis Martin. We’ve got to respond to that, and we haven’t responded to that as well as we’ve need to.”